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UN Human Rights Council: Settlement issue could end up in the International Criminal Court

12:00 Jan 31 2013 Occupied Palestinian Territories (oPT): West Bank

UN Human Rights Council: Settlement issue could end up in the International Criminal Court UN Human Rights Council: Settlement issue could end up in the International Criminal Court
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A Jewish settler looking at the West bank settlement of Maaleh Adumim, from the E-1 area on the eastern outskirts of Jerusalem. Photo by AP

January 28, 2013: Two caravans form a new Israeli settler outpost on land belonging to the Palestinian West Bank village of Jayyous. The caravans were put there last week and are already connected to the water lines of the nearby settlement of Zufit (photo: Activestills)

UN Human Rights Council: Settlement issue could end up in the International Criminal Court

By Noam Sheizaf for +972map

Unprecedented report calls for UN Member States “to assume their responsibilities in their relationship to a State breaching peremptory norms of international law.”

The United Nations Human Rights Council has published its fact finding mission’s report on the settlements. The report concludes that Israeli settlements are constructed for the benefits of Jews only through a system of ethnic segregation and military law, and are in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which forbids the transfer of civilian populations into occupied territory by the occupying force. According to the report:

Israel must, in compliance with article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, cease all settlement activities without preconditions. It must immediately initiate a process of withdrawal of all settlers from the OPT.

Israel is a signatory to the Fourth Geneva Convention but has concluded that it does not apply to the territories occupied from Jordan and Egypt in 1967, since both countries abandoned any claims to this land. Israel considers the territories “disputed” (a position taken recently by the Levi Commission, which called upon Israel to legalized all outposts built on Palestinian land) However, even the Israeli narrative doesn’t explain ethnic segregation in the West Bank, military law and the absence of human or political rights for the non-Jewish civilian population in the West Bank.

There are two important articles in the HRC report which go beyond the usual condemnations of the settlements that have been issued for decades by the international community. First, the Human Rights Council calls upon other nations, agencies and companies to break ties with the settlement project – a step which might open the door for sanctions against settlement products or for the enforcement of relevant articles in trade agreements with Israel, for example by the European Union.

116. The Mission calls upon all Member States to comply with their obligations under international law and to assume their responsibilities in their relationship to a State breaching peremptory norms of international law – specifically not to recogniזe an unlawful situation resulting from Israel’s violations.

117. Private companies must assess the human rights impact of their activities and take all necessary steps – including by terminating their business interests in the settlements – to ensure they are not adversely impacting the human rights of the Palestinian People in conformity with international law as well as the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. The Mission calls upon all Member States to take appropriate measures to ensure that business enterprises domiciled in their territory and/or under their jurisdiction, including those owned or controlled by them, that conduct activities in or related to the settlements respect human rights throughout their operations.

The report also explicitly suggests that the Palestinians could sue Israelis in the International Criminal Court could deal with the issue of the settlement. A press release on the Human Rights Council site states:

The report states that Israel is committing serious breaches of its obligations under the right to self-determination and under humanitarian law. The report also concludes that the Rome Statute establishes the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction over the transfer of populations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

Israel has refused to cooperate with the fact-finding mission. The United States has warned the Palestinians in the past not to take Israel to the International Criminal Court, as part of its tradition of preventing any punitive action in response to human rights violations by Israel in the occupied territories. The United States was the only country that voted against the fact finding mission on the settlements.

Israel has been rapidly increasing settlement activities since the Oslo Accords, especially in the last decade. According to the Jerusalem-based NGO Ir Amim, 2012 has been a record year in settlement construction in East Jerusalem. On the eve of the Oslo Accords, there were approximately 107,00 thousands settlers in the West Bank and Gaza, and 115,000 in East Jerusalem. by 2001 these numbers grew to 200,000 in the West Bank and Gaza and 167,000 in East Jerusalem. In 2011 there were 189,000 settlers in and around East Jerusalem, and 324,000 settlers in the West Bank, bringing the total numbers of Jewish settlers to over half a million. There are 127 settlements in the West Bank alone, as well as dozens of Jewish “outposts.” The UN report calls Israel’s settlement activities “creeping annexation.”

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RAMALLAH, January 31, 2013 (WAFA) – The United Nations human rights investigators Thursday called on Israel to stop the progress of settlement expansion and withdraw all Jewish settlers from the West Bank, said media sources.

The report which was deemed as “harsh” by some, condemned the Israeli practices in the West Bank and the ongoing settlement activities that are effecting the lives of Palestinians saying they violate international law.

The UN’s Inquiry’s report, published in Geneva, said, 'Israel must, in compliance with article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, cease all settlement activities without preconditions. It must immediately initiate a process of withdrawal of all settlers from the Occupied Palestinian Territories.”

The report was the fruit of 50 interviews with Palestinians who testified about the gigantic effect the settlement activities and settlers had on their lives including land confiscation, regular attacks by the settlers and damage to property.

The report said the existence of such settlements leads to the violation of the rights of a large number of Palestinians in many different ways.

M.H.
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Responding to UN call for sanctions on Israel over settlements, Ashrawi asserts that even if Israel boycotts the council and ignores its report, it can't ignore that it is now isolated even further.

By Jack Khoury for Haaretz

The UN Human Rights Council's call for sanctions against Israel is crucial because it clearly expresses the idea that the settlement enterprise leads to "ethnic cleansing" in the West Bank, said Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the PLO Executive Committee.

The report released Thursday calls on governments and private corporations across the world to consider economic and political sanctions against Israel over its construction in the settlements. This is the first time such a call has been made from within the United Nations.

The report also called on Israel to halt settlement expansion and withdraw all settlers from the West Bank, saying that its practices violated international law.

Ashrawi said that even if Israel boycotts the council and ignores its report, it can't ignore that Israel is now isolated even further, and that Jerusalem will ultimately have to discuss the report with the international community and UN agencies.

She said that in the past both the international community and Israel ignored UN decisions, but the new report comes out in an era when most of the world recognizes Palestine as a state, and Palestinians have more options.

“We will address every position and every report, and we will accept the decisions for consolidating Palestine's status," she said. "We will also consider turning to the International Criminal Court when the time is right.”

Ashrawi said the PLO is not pinning any hopes on Israel's next government because “when all is said and done, [Benjamin] Netanyahu will be the prime minister once again.”
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